The lost art of healing /

Never Before has medicine had the capacity to do so much good, yet never have people been so disenchanted with their doctors. The problem is that doctors have lost the art of healing, which involves much more than diagnostic skills and the ability to mobilize technology. At its core is the doctor-pa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lown, B. (Bernard)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Subjects:
Online Access:Publisher description
Description
Summary:Never Before has medicine had the capacity to do so much good, yet never have people been so disenchanted with their doctors. The problem is that doctors have lost the art of healing, which involves much more than diagnostic skills and the ability to mobilize technology. At its core is the doctor-patient relationship, and in this provocative book one of our most distinguished physicians draws on forty years of experience to show how vitally important that relationship.
Is. Dr. Lown offers a new paradigm: medicine with a human face, in which the art of healing is just as important as the mastery of medical techniques. This approach can cure as many ills as all the wonders of modern technology, and it can contain costs more readily than any health care reform plan.
Item Description:The Cushing Library/Basbanes Collection copy is part of the Nicholas A. Basbanes Collection of Inscribed Books.
Physical Description:xviii, 332 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:0395825253
9780395825259